Financial Times Europe - 20.02.2020

(WallPaper) #1

20 ★ Thursday20 February 2020


Leo Lewis


Markets Insight


Garmin ed the S&P 500 gainers afterl
beating expectations in its full-year
results, with the navigation gadget
maker’s quarterly revenue topping $1bn
for the first time in a decade.
Fitness was Garmin’s standout
category, delivering year-on-year growth
of 34.5 per cent while management
predicted a slower pace of decline at its
legacy auto-navigation business in 2020.
Tesla as up following reports that itw
was preparing to switch car production to
cobalt-free batteries.
Meanwhile, Piper Sandler raised its
Tesla target price and repeated
“overweight” advice after trying one of
the company’s “objects of desire” rooftop
solar charging systems.
“We are convinced that Tesla’s
automotive products offer a superior
ownership experience,” the broker told
clients. “If history is any indication, we’ll
eventually be saying something similar
about generating and storing our own
solar power.”
Forecast-beating earnings and
reassuring 2020 guidance liftedConcho
Resources, the Permian Basin oil explorer.
Daily deals websiteGroupon lungedp
to a record low after posting worse than
expected revenue and earnings for the
third straight quarter.Bryce Elder


Wall Street Eurozone London


Puma ed the gainers as signs of al
slowing coronavirus infection rate helped
lift the Stoxx Europe 600 to a record high.
Full-year results from Puma beat
consensus forecasts by about 1 per cent
as Europe, the Middle East and Africa
delivered the second-highest quarterly
growth since 2006.
The sportswear makersaid coronavirus
effects should “normalise” shortly.
HelloFresh ained after key USg
competitorBlue Apron aid weakers
demand had forced it to evaluate
strategic options including a sale.
Linda Kozlowski, Blue Apron president,
blamed its marketing budget, and cited
the Berlin-based meal-kit provider in a
conference call as showing what was
possible with “the right resources”.
Deutsche Telekom ose on forecast-r
beating fourth-quarter profit and a 2020
free cash flow target that was higher than
consensus expectations.
Campari as under pressure afterw
posting a slowdown in organic growth
and weakening margins.
The drinks maker also switched its
registered office to the Netherlands in a
move that may allow its controlling
shareholder,Lagfin, to retain voting
control even in the event of new equity
being issued.Bryce Elder

Berkeley ose on the back of an HSBCr
upgrade to “buy”, with the broker arguing
that the post-election house price bounce
in southern England should allow
housebuilders to defend their current
profit margin levels for at least the next
four years.
Man Group urged after Exane BNPs
Paribas turned positive.
Having been the worst-performing
asset manager stock in the year to date,
Man offered near-term upside as a recent
recovery in flow trends set the group up
for “a potentially large beat” when it
delivers full-year results next week,
Exane said.
Royal Mail lipped to a record low afters
Liberum Capital reiterated “sell” advice
and cut its target price from 175p to 120p.
Worsening letter volumes and poor
industrial relations were threatening to
undermine Royal Mail’s 2024 turnround
target and made the dividend “potentially
unsustainable”, Liberum said.
Plus500, the financial markets
bookmaker, slid after Canaccord Genuity
repeated a “sell” rating.
Recent results from Plus500 had
shown poor customer numbers and the
“highest ever churn rate”, suggesting
further downside risk to earnings
forecasts, Canaccord said.Bryce Elder

3 S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit intraday
records, propelled by chipmakers
3 Hopes of central bank intervention
help gold hover near seven-year high
3 Brent crude approaches $60 after US
imposes sanctions on Rosneft subsidiary


Global stocks climbed yesterday following
reports that Beijing was looking at rolling
out policies to prop up Chinese sectors
hit hard by the coronavirus.
The FTSE All-World index rose 0.5 per
cent as the number of cases surpassed
75,000 while deaths exceeded 2,000.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng and Tokyo’s
Nikkei 225 Average rose 0.5 per cent and
0.9 per cent, respectively, although the
CSI 300 index of Shanghai- and
Shenzhen-listed shares slid 0.2 per cent.
The resilience of Chinese stocks, which
are down just 1.1 per cent this year,
“suggests investors view the economic
disruption to the Chinese economy as
shortlived, in part driven by the decline in
new confirmed cases over the past two
weeks”, said Kenneth Ho, head of Asia
credit strategy research at Goldman
Sachs.
On Wall Street, the S&P 500 and
Nasdaq Composite indices climbed to
fresh intraday records by midday with
technology companies leading the rallies.
ChipmakersNvidia, Advanced Micro
Devices nda Analog Devices ropelledp
the tech-heavy Nasdaq 0.9 per cent
higher while the S&P 500 rose 0.7 per cent.


In Europe, Frankfurt’s export-
dependent Xetra Dax gained 0.8 per cent
while Paris’s CAC 40 rose 0.9 per cent.
Haven assets stayed near recent highs,
with the yield on the 10-year US Treasury
up 1 basis point to 1.56 per cent while
gold built on Monday’s rally to hover near
a seven-year peak of $1,606 an ounce.
There is an “assumption that policy-
makers around the world are in maximum
stimulus mode”, said John Hardy, head of
FX Strategy at Saxo Bank, an idea that
has been “rewarding for gold bulls”.
But Capital Economics said the “rally in

gold will end before long” as it doubted
“the [coronavirus] outbreak will prompt
the Fed to cut rates further”.
CapEco analysts added: “The Fed
would only loosen policy if there were
evidence of significant economic costs at
home, alongside a large and sustained
drop in equity prices.”
Brent crude rallied after the US
imposed sanctions on aRosneft
subsidiary over Venezuelan oil,
prompting fears over squeezed global
supplies. Thebenchmark rose 2.8 per
cent to $59.36 a barrel.Anna Gross

What you need to know


Gold nears -year high as growth fears unnerve investors


Source: Bloomberg

 per ounce

























       


The day in the markets


Markets update


US Eurozone Japan UK China Brazil
Stocks S&P 500 Eurofirst 300 Nikkei 225 FTSE100 Shanghai Comp Bovespa
Level 3389.58 1690.83 23400.70 7457.02 2975.40 116084.
% change on day 0.57 0.80 0.89 1.02 -0.32 0.
Currency $ index (DXY) $ per € Yen per $ $ per £ Rmb per $ Real per $
Level 99.496 1.079 110.950 1.295 6.994 4.
% change on day 0.056 -0.277 1.038 -0.690 -0.158 0.
Govt. bonds 10-year Treasury 10-year Bund 10-year JGB 10-year Gilt 10-year bond 10-year bond
Yield 1.559 -0.419 -0.051 0.620 2.897 6.
Basis point change on day 1.450 -1.000 0.450 -1.100 -0.400 -1.
World index, CommodsFTSE All-World Oil - Brent Oil - WTI Gold Silver Metals (LMEX)
Level 382.67 59.26 53.56 1589.85 17.89 2674.
% change on day 0.49 2.61 2.19 0.57 0.48 -0.
Yesterday's close apart from: Currencies = 16:00 GMT; S&P, Bovespa, All World, Oil = 17:00 GMT; Gold, Silver = London pm fix. Bond data supplied by Tullett Prebon.


Main equity markets


S&P 500 index Eurofirst 300 index FTSE 100 index

| |||||| ||||||||| ||||
Dec 2020 Feb

3200


3280


3360


3440


| |||||||||||||||||||
Dec 2020 Feb

1600


1640


1680


1720


| ||||| |||||||| ||||||
Dec 2020 Feb

7200


7360


7520


7680


Biggest movers
% US Eurozone UK


Ups

Garmin Ltd 7.
Concho Resources 6.
Nvidia 4.
Diamondback Energy 4.
Ipg Photonics 4.

Stmicroelectronics 4.
Dt.telekom 4.
Kerry Grp 3.
Galp Energia 3.
Kering 3.

Flutter Entertainment 4.
Evraz 3.
Melrose Industries 3.
Ocado 3.
Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust 3.
%


Downs

Extra Space Storage -6.
Public Storage -4.
Vornado Realty Trust -3.
Allegion -2.
Kimco Realty -2.
Prices taken at 17:00 GMT

Ageas -5.
Acs Const. -4.
Ing -3.
Alstom -2.
Thyssenkrupp -2.
Based on the constituents of the FTSE Eurofirst 300 Eurozone

Nmc Health -7.
Rolls-royce Holdings -1.
Auto Trader -1.
Standard Chartered -0.
Royal Bank Of Scotland -0.
All data provided by Morningstar unless otherwise noted.

W


h e n Ja p a n’s s t o c k
market opened on
Monday this week, it
had much in common
with afugu uffer fish —p
expensive, delicious only to fanatics and
absolutely riddled with danger.
Over the weekend, round-the-clock
media coverage focused on the spread of
coronavirus, which had caused factory
stoppages and other phenomena sure to
cause financial trouble.
By the time trading began, a domestic
credit rating agency released a list of 250
Japanese companies from piano manu-
facturers to bullet train operators that
it said would be particularly hard hit.
The government then piled on the
misery, revealing that fourth-quarter
nationalgrowth shrank at an annual-
ised rate of 6.3 per cent, much worse
than anexpected 3.7 per cent decline.
The drop, triggered by an October
increase inconsumption tax, takes
Japan to the brink of recession.
Then came a report on sales in the
country’s department stores in the first
half of February, revealing the grim
effects of high-spending Chinese visitors
staying at home. Analysts declared the
situation almost as bad as the post-
Lehman Brothers wipeout.
At almost any time in thepast 30 years,
one of these might have been enough to
wreck Tokyo’s market, sending the
Topix into a big spasm of capitulation
that seemed part of the natural order.
But the pain this time, despite every-
thing, has been comparatively dulled —
the toxic blowfish, despite its reputation
for lethality, has been subdued.
The benchmark index remains
comfortably in the middle of its trading
range of thepast couple of years and a
good 13 per cent higherthan it was at the
start of 2019.

Some confess, quietly, to being puz-
zled. Plenty of veteran Tokyo investors
and traders feel that something worse
should be playing out by now but are
grateful it has not. They have their own
theories about what may be happening.
The cheap yen is one popular expla-
nation, its value pulled down by the
relentless outflow of investment money
from corporate Japan and the country’s
pension funds. But the more persuasive
answer seems to rest in two forces that
have gained momentum in recent years.
The first of these, visible this week,
has been the huge presence of the Bank
of Japan and its ¥6tn ($55bn)-a-year

programme of buying exchange traded
funds — a mechanism that allows it to
come into the market on any given day
to buy about ¥70bn.
The BoJ has deployed that weapon on
four of the 11 trading sessions so far in
February — roughly the same pace as
January and not especially elevated
from the pace that became the norm
between 2016 and early 2019.
Over the years,a pattern has now
emerged — if the Topix falls by 0.5 per
cent or more in the morning session, the
BoJ will be there to buy a big chunk of
Topix-tracking ETFs in the afternoon.
One conclusion is that this price-
insensitive buying generates artificial
upside — a psychological trick that the
BoJ had hoped would tempt people to
become investors in omestic stocks.d
A better interpretation, say traders, is

that, over time, the BoJ has merely added
friction to the downside. The predicta-
bility of the BoJ’s buying on dips has
made short positions more dangerous
trades. That means that,despite terrible
newsflow, hedge funds have tended to
opt out from the large bearish bets that
would have amplified past sell-offs.
A second source of hidden support for
the market has come from company
share buybacks that, at almost ¥14tn
last year, were more than 100 per cent
higher than in 2018.
The purchases are, undoubtedly, a
manifestation of a shareholder-friendly
shift in recent years. But it may be over-
stating things, as one Nomura strategist
suggests, to attribute the market’s resil-
ience to a stand-off between “coronavi-
rus and corporate governance”.
If the market were genuinely thrilled
by progress on governance, value stocks
would not be mouldering on the shelf
after a decade of underperformance.
The critical element here, according
to traders, is not the scale of the buy-
backs but the exceptionally low-volume
trading environment into which they
have been pitched.
Kirin s a good example. Sincei
announcing a huge buyback in Novem-
berand the end of January, the drinks
group has bought just over 16m of its
shares. Butitspurchases have repre-
sented an average of about 14 per cent of
daily trading over that period.
Extrapolated across a market where
buybacks are in fashion, their influence
is probably far greater than it might be
elsewhere.
“I have to believe that these buybacks
are offering a greater invisible support
to the market than any of us imagine,”
said one Tokyo-based broker.

[email protected]

Toxic blowfish of


Japanese stocks is


not inflicting pain


‘I have to believe that


these share buybacks are
offering a greater invisible

support to the market’


FEBRUARY 20 2020 Section:Markets Time: 2/202019/ - 18:51 User:stephen.smith Page Name:MARKETS2, Part,Page,Edition:EUR , 20, 1

Free download pdf